| Luciano A. Ferrer on 23 Mar 2001 20:55:18 -0000 |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| [nettime-lat] Fw: The New Architect: Art in Technological Times |
----- Original Message -----
From: "TheNewArchitect" <TheNewArchitect@newsletter.webtechniques.com>
To: <laferrer@bigfoot.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2001 8:38 PM
Subject: The New Architect: Art in Technological Times
> The New Architect
> -----------------------
> Strategies for Web Design & Development Firms
> http://www.designshops.com/
>
>
>
> =======================================================advertisement=
> SIGN UP NOW!
> Get the latest information on the WEB2001 Conference & Exposition and
> the new Internet+Mobile Conference (co-located at WEB2001) --
> September 4-8, 2001 in San Francisco. Get objective, solutions-oriented
> information on the latest Internet technologies and Internet to mobile strategies.
> http://www.web2001show.com
>
> =====================================================================
>
>
> "010101: Art in Technological Times"
>
> By Stacy Meyn
>
> Contemporary Art vs. Digital Technology
>
> The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is the first to collect Web
> projects as part of its architectural design collection. The museum
> has benefited from a growing web presence, its proximity to the
> digital design boom, and has seen several of its featured artists
> win Webby awards. In an acknowledgement to this convergence of
> technology and art, SFMOMA recently launched "010101: Art in
> Technological Times." The exhibit, which includes an elaborate web
> component, features works by five artists "who are responding to a
> world altered by the increasing presence of digital media and
> technology."
>
> Vision
>
> Exhibiting web art is controversial. "People have questions about
> how you exhibit web art in museums and whether it even belongs
> there," says SFMOMA curator Aaron Betsky. "We're all grappling
> with what it is that you call Web art, or Net art, or digitally-
> based work, and how you present it and collect it."
>
> The task of taking the curatorial and artistic vision of 010101
> from concrete to electronic went to San Francisco's Perimetre-Flux,
> who've been involved in PC-based projects with SFMOMA before
> (Carleton Watkins: The Art of Perception).
> Perimetre-Flux was bornin 1998, when Media/Design Director Stephen
> Jaycox and his associates decided to move away from building things
> like corporate extranets. "The bulk of us were trained as
> architects and doing industry-related projects. It was interesting
> but relatively banal as far as subject matter and we were looking
> for ways to get into narrative experiences."
>
> It was this combination of skills that attracted Curator Aaron
> Betsky when SFMOMA was putting together 010101. "We had bandied
> a few other people around but I already knew Stephen Jaycox very
> well. Perimetre could provide the whole continuum from digital
> work to architecture, including graphic design."
>
> Enter 010101's exhibit interface. "It became a question of how to
> reconcile the online experience and the gallery experience when
> there was a growing tendency of onlineartists to resist being
> represented in gallery space," explains Jaycox. "This exhibition
> sought to create a way to contextualize the five commissioned
> Web projects online so that you felt like you were going
> somewhere."
>
> Process
>
> 010101's artwork includes video practices, sculpture, computer-
> driven installations, and good-ol' drawings and paintings. The
> site allows users to track interactivity through flowcharts of
> vistors' "synthesized messages," archived discussion PDFs, or
> log into the dialogue forum and participate in "SiteStreaming"
> online tours.
>
> But what sets this virtual exhibit apart from anyone ftping
> artwork online is the unique interface merging the works. Enigmatic
> plus-and-minus icons lead to expandable/collapsible introduction
> details and a user's guide. Relevant quotations ("Think Texts")
> prevail, triggered from various locations. Horizontal theme
> navigation bars launch exhibit categories: anonymity, technology,
> detritus, nomadism, identity, sprawl, and reality.
>
> "Our approach was infrastructural at first as we had decided that
> the backbone of the project would be built around the Think
> Texts," says Jaycox. "A database structure was created to allow a
> changing body of content to be pushed into the Web and
> gallery spaces simultaneously (in the gallery on kiosks--on
> the Web site via black pixels which pop up randomly). This allowed
> Web and gallery to be like a parking lot for texts. The ability
> for this content to change is what would keep the exhibitions'
> content fresh,throwing new lenses between viewers and
> the artist's work."
>
> "Part of this exhibition is about how technology is changing both
> art and how it is displayed or received and understood," says
> Bestsky. "We didn't come to Perimetre with any particular 'make
> it like this'. Just an understanding of how artists and designers
> were responding to changing computer communication technology and
> that the designof the exhibition be part of that response."
>
> Jaycox understands this dichotomy. "I think the biggest challenge
> for the project was to discriminately reconcile the Web and gallery
> spaces. We decided with the curators that the Web presentation of
> 010101 should have a sense of place--that it would be understood
> as an aesthetic/experiential context for the artists' work
> contained within. Thus the effort was to create a user experience
> that was differentiated from the way that the institutional site,
> sfmoma.org, claimed space."
>
> Another challenge was to create user experience that was unique
> and had meaningful navigational/temporal qualities. Jaycox
> recognized that if viewers came to the site with
> preconceptions/expectations about the experience they would have,
> the resulting challenge would be a disappointment. "The design
> was to create a navigational landscape that could be learned
> quickly as an engaging and poetic experience," he explains.
> "This is not about data--it is about data aestheticized.
>
> Nuts 'n Bolts
>
> The site is being served in SFMOMA's basement, using a QuickTime
> Streaming server as well as the database and the site servers. "We
> all agreed that 4.0+ browsers with the two relatively ubiquitous
> plug-ins (QuickTime, Flash) would suit our target audience and
> encourage those lacking to upgrade their software," says Jaycox.
>
> The Museum will be be responsible for the online content for about
> 12 months, after which it will be available in an archived state
> via ArtMuseum.net for 3 years. In the meantime, site visits to
> 010101 have tripled since it joined a Museum web ring and Betsky
> has noted brisk foot traffic to the Museum gallery.
>
> A New Begining
>
> 010101 has its critics, but this is web curating at an early
> stage. "Don't forget that the Web as a medium for doing anything
> but sending text is really only five years old at the most," says
> Bestsky." People are still learning what the medium is while they
> make it."
>
> 010101 is open and continues through July 8th, 2001
>
> Stacy is a freelance writer, Web developer, and occasional artist
> involved with media, socio-political, and health-related projects.
> She is co-founder of and has written for Worldly Remains magazine,
> a pop culture review (worldlyremains.com).
> mailto:stacy@wellnesswealth.org.
>
> Check Out:
>
> http://010101.sfmoma.org
> SFMOMA's 010101: Art in Technological Times
>
> http://www.wired.com/news/topstories/0,1287,2009,00.html
> "Museums Add Web Sites to Collections" by Susan Kuchinskas
>
> http://www.sfmoma.org/espace/espace_overview.html
> Examples from SFMOMA's digital architecture collection
>
> http://www.sfmoma.org/info/webby_winner_announce.html
> Webby awards for SFMOMA artists
>
>
> =======================================================advertisement=
>
>
> Sponsored by "The Complete E-Commerce Book" from CMP Books
>
> Make your e-commerce vision a success with careful planning
> of the customer experience, effective design, cutting-edge
> programming and robust server configuration, as well as
> marketing, customer service, order processing and
> warehousing and shipping.
>
> http://www.telecombooks.com/cgi-bin/shopspecific/store/products/3690.htm
>
>
> =====================================================================
>
>
> Don't miss out on our newsletters and conferences:
>
>
> Are you going to WEB2001? Meet and learn from the leaders
> of the Web. Register today at:
> http://newsletter.webtechniques.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eC4n0BS87g0ej0LYMt
>
>
> Are you up to date on the latest news in the Web design and
> development industry? Do you get direct links to articles
> that teach the latest in Internet technology? Sign up for
> our newsletters at:
> http://newsletter.webtechniques.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eC4n0BS87g0ej0BajM
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------
>
>
> Visit these sites within the WebReview network:
>
> WebReview.com
> http://www.webreview.com/
> Cross-training for Web teams.
>
> WebTechniques.com
> http://newsletter.webtechniques.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eC4n0BS87g0ej0L1E6
> Solutions for Internet professionals.
>
> WEB2001 Conference & Exposition
> Internet+Mobile Conference
> http://www.web2001show.com/
> Where Web professionals converge.
>
> WebCoder.com
> http://www.webcoder.com/
> Tutorials for applications developers.
>
>
> =====================================================================
> The New Architect is brought to you by CMP Media Inc.,
> publishers of Web Techniques magazine and organizers of
> the WEB2001 Conference & Exposition.
> =====================================================================
>
> To unsubscribe from The New Architect, or any other
> Web Review Network newsletter, please go to the following page:
>
> http://www.webtechniques.com/newsletter/unsubscribe.shtml
>
>
> Click here to subscribe if this email was forwarded to you by a friend:
>
> http://www.webtechniques.com/cgi-bin/newsletter/options_flonet?site=webtechniques&letter=newarchitect
>
_______________________________________________
nettime-lat mailing list
nettime-lat@nettime.org
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-lat